Tag Archives: parenting attachment challenged children

Babies Can Be Traumatized Too

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
We have all been asked by the author of this article to pass this information along about trauma that occurs in the psyche of newborn children who get adopted straight away after they are born or just a few days or months later.  I am pleased to share this with you.  Please read it and distribute it at will.

The Trauma Tree – Understanding The Impact Of Childhood Trauma

By 

Welcome to STEAM Powered Family! If you’re new here you might want to also follow me over on Pinterest. Thanks for visiting!

Childhood trauma is often overlooked, greatly misunderstood and one of the most damaging things that can happen to a child. The effects can last a lifetime and my hope is to never hear the words, At least he was too young to remember, again.

My son has PTSD – Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.Except he can’t have PTSD because the medical definition of PTSD requires that the cause be a remembered event. So although he suffered complex and prolonged trauma from before he was even born and through his first year of life, traumas that still affect his every moment and every breath, he can’t be diagnosed with PTSD.

There is a movement to get a new diagnosis recognized, Developmental Trauma Disorder since in reality the issue is that PTSD or trauma experienced later in life, is different from trauma experienced while the brain is still forming. It needs its own definition, but as a parent trying to get help for my son, it is incredibly frustrating that so little is known about the effect of trauma on children.

Over the years, since our adoption was completed and we experienced our son’s struggles first hand, I have returned to school and my studies of the brain trying to help my son heal and grow into the amazing adult I know he is meant to be. And there is one issue that I want to bring up and that needs to change in society.

One of the most maddening things I hear is that my son was too young to remember the traumas he experienced as an infant and toddler, therefore he will be fine. This is completely and utterly wrong, in fact, it is the complete opposite. Through my studies, I came across a great image to explain the truth of childhood trauma and brain resiliency.

Picture a tree with roots.

The Trauma Tree

The roots represent the prenatal stage of growth, where the tree touches the ground is birth, the trunk is infancy and early childhood, lower branches are childhood, and up to adulthood at the top branches. If trauma occurs at any stage, the rest of the tree’s growth (aka, the brain’s growth) beyond that point is negatively affected. The older you are, the more life experiences and knowledge you have to cope and the less actively the brain is developing (ie. the more branches you have to compensate).

Childhood trauma is often complex and can be catastrophic, leaving a lifetime of struggles in almost all facets of life. This is significantly true of trauma exposure during the prenatal and infancy stages (roots and trunk) when the brain is at its most critical and active phases of development. The younger a person is when exposed to trauma, the higher their risk of developing trauma-related disorders including learning disorders, developmental disorders, cognitive deficits, attention issues, attachment disorders, and so much more.

A young brain needs a healthy chemistry to develop properly. A brain that is developing while flooded with trauma induced chemicals (such as cortisol and adrenaline) fails to form healthy, strong connections.

Children are never too young to remember. Please don’t belittle childhood trauma as being a lesser form of trauma. The parents who are raising these children face enough struggles. It is my hope to create greater understanding in the world about the effects of trauma on a child’s brain.
Please share this wide and far so we can all work together to help these children. And please, never again say: At least they were too young to remember.

Love Matters,

Ce

The Attach Place Center
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled forFebruary 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up emailJen@attachplace.com and she will register you.
 
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every secondWednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
Expected Release Date: February 28, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.

Your Attachment Style Impacts Parenting

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
I gave a little presentation the other day on attachment styles and how a parent’s style can positively or negatively impact a parent’s ability to raise a beautiful and challenging child.  When all was said and done, it seemed I focused too much on the negative.  I wish I could only focused on the positive.  I guess I believe that we often are so strength-based in our approaches to parent education and intervention that we don’t help parents see how they can change themselves to change their relationship with their hurting child.
When parents come into my office seeking help for their child, it is usually their attachment style that has gotten in the way of them being effective and loving with their child from difficult beginnings.  It is not the parent’s fault. It is a secret about parenting rarely brought into the light. Many of us are traumatized by our own experiences in childhood and life.  That trauma can interfere with our ability to weather the chronic maladaptive states of children who are also traumatized.
If you want to focus on the positive, then do attachment promoting parenting, therapeutic parenting–high nurture, high structure. Attunement, engagement, play, empathy, understanding and connection are the keys to healing attachment and trauma wounds in children and adults.  When you find you are unable to do those things on a regular basis, you probably need to look within at your own history of trauma and attachment.
Love matters,
Ce
The Attach Place Center
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled forFebruary 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.com and she will register you.
 
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every secondWednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.

Energize Times Three

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
Raising traumatized, attachment challenged children is stressful and you must take care of your energy systems in order not to fall prey to the ravages of depletion.  When I am depleted, I eat too much, sleep too little, and snap at my children.  I am even known to yell and be unreasonable. During these times, I am exhausted and I cry a lot, too. Imagine that.
There are three basic human energy systems:
Physical, body
Emotional, mood
Mental, problem-solving
When your body is depleted, you must nurture and rest it.  Sleep is ever so important to all energy systems, especially your body.  Go to bed early, sleep at least 8 hours, and get up early. Exercise moderately and eat clean foods (that means unprocessed and fresh.)  This is all obvious and yet extremely hard to put first in your life when your child is screaming like a banshee.  Yes, it is hard.  Do it anyway.
You can lift your mood by shifting your posture, directing your eyes more upward than downward, getting sunlight first thing in the morning, and engaging in physical or intellectual activities to give your emotions a distracted relief.  Check-out your thinking to make sure you aren’t telling yourself horror stories about the future of your child.  Nothing sours a mood more than catastrophizing the “what ifs” for 10 years from now.
Thinking, pondering and obsessing about something over and over is like putting yourself in a hamster cage and running the wheel all day and all night.  You are wearing your mental capacity out.  Give your mind a break by putting on some music and get your jiggy on (okay I don’t know what that means either) or call a friend for a gabfest over tea. I read an article about Caffeinated Napping that touted drinking a cup of coffee just before a 20-minute nap; the theory being that the coffee would kick in just as you wake to make you feel truly energized. Who knew?  I’ve been doing that for years, but I really don’t recommend it. A brisk walk with the dog is always a welcome mental refresher. Oxygen to the brain is a good thing.
If you aren’t taking care of your energy systems, you are not going to be taking good care of your child.  Oh, one last thing: stay away from the blue light of screens for at least four hours before bedtime and you might find you sleep like a puppy all cozied up under the covers.
Love matters,
Ce
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.com and she will register you.
 
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every second Wednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.

The Journey

Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
Just because the rock says JOY doesn’t mean you can always find it.
Adopting wounded children is like a spiritual journey to Mecca, the Mountaintop, the Wall.  Kicking and screaming, you will have to surrender your pre-conceived notions of who you are, what you want, and how you live. You will fight for things you never knew you needed and against things you never thought existed.  This journey will sweat you, bleed you, tear your heart out.  It will require courage of warriors and strength of angels.  You will find yourself flat on the floor, prostate and desperate.  And ultimately you will rise up from the ashes like a brilliant phoenix never before witnessed by mere mortals. Out of nowhere you will fall on the sword to save a child’s soul, so lost and contorted there is no other way to get around the past transgressions held deep within.
ReJOYce in your persistence, your resilience, your tenacity to live each day as if it were the first one; the first day you set eyes–eyes of hope, of inspiration, of love–upon your precious child.
Love matters,
Ce
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.com and she will register you.
 
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every second Wednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.

Keep Calm And Carry On Therapeutic Parenting

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
Humans express fear in many ways.  Parents often misread the behavior of their children as defiant, rude, oppositional, stubborn, willful, rejecting, negative, unmotivated, selfish, greedy, heartless or fake. When you see those behaviors in children from difficult beginnings, you can bet money on fear being the culprit deep within.  Trauma from abuse and attachment separation is frozen in the psyche of our children.
To change these undesirable behaviors, parents must keep calm and carry on with the healing power of corrective parenting–empathy, structure, nurture, training, and repetition.  It takes years to transform felt fear into felt safety.  That is your number one job as a therapeutic parent–slowing bringing your child out of the dark basement of fear into the light of a new loving family life.
Faint of heart, need not apply.  It takes nerves of steel to keep your wits about you, so be sure you get respite.  Without respite, you will find yourself expressing fear in your parenting.
Love matters,
Ce
The Attach Place Center
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.comand she will register you.
 
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every second Wednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.

Meet Your Child

 

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
It is so tempting to think our children with wounded hearts are doing what they do on purpose.  Somehow if it were on purpose, then it follows we would have hope that it could change by will power, incentive, desire or fear.
Unfortunately, hope springs more from seeing with clear eyes the child who stands before us imperfect in need of acceptance, than in the angry presumption that it is stubbornness, opposition, and hatefulness in need of punishment.
Providing safety, training, understanding, empathy, gentle correction and repetition beyond belief slowly allows the development of the part of the brain where the “brakes” live undeveloped.  Imagine being a train without brakes; a car stuck on go, or a bike speeding downhill without a chain.  Our children are like that, just itching to grow up into a stable brain.
Parents, take the high road every chance you get.  From that elevated place, the perspective is deep and wide.  From the low road, there are only embankments, ditches, hairpin turns and sinkholes ahead. It is a choice we all struggle to make.
Love matters,
Ce
The Attach Place Center
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12 noon to 4 pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.comand she will register you.
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is open to all every second Wednesday of the month from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm.  Group and childcare are FREE.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.

They Have Their Own Trajectories

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parents,
I received a cryptic email last week by accident, as it was not meant for me.  It was, however, a sentence sent to someone else about the email I sent to you about children from difficult beginnings and what “healing” involves. The upshot, if I interpreted it correctly, was something like, What happened to my child then, because s/he doesn’t fit with the tenets of this email?
This is what I know. You can do everything under the sun to the best of your ability:  Theraplay, coherent narrative work, playful engagement, withhold punishment to foster felt safety, and your child may still have a life trajectory that is not what you had hoped.  Further, some trajectories are ultimately tragic.
Things that happen in utero, at birth, and within the early years set a life course for each of us.  Then add to the equation genetic make-up, epigenetics, parenting and attachment styles, and you get quite a complex situation that no fixed set of interventions can overturn. I feel grateful when children grow, learn and become as much of who they are as they can, while parents accept, love deeply, and let go of unrealistic expectations.  That, to me, is the definition of healing.  Things like college, career, relationships, children, and other satisfactions of life are part of the big picture no one has complete control over. Sometimes the ugly side of life takes over and carries your child in directions you can hardly stomach.
Personally, my children are incredible human beings.  They have survived dreadful early circumstances and both have quite a genetic load of mental health issues.   Growing up, each had to deal with my attachment challenge entwined with their attachment and trauma challenges to find a way to grow, mature, and develop identities that allow them to keep going every day. The fact that we all survived and love one another is quite a feat.
Do I wish I had been able to whip up a miracle that would have launched them off to college, or on to a trade or talent?  Do I wish I hadABRACADABRA’d a strong enough relationship to shape their idea of the perfect life partner? Do I wish their mental health were more stable and their dysregulation less? Do I wish they could have experienced being students in regular high schools, the freedom to drive a car, the thrill of trying out foranything and getting picked?  Do I wish more for my children?
Yes. Yes, I do.  I feel sad when my children struggle; when they cannot explore the world or hold down a job or avoid homelessness.  I am heartbroken when I imagine that a relationship with a lifelong partner will likely be ephemeral at best.  Just yesterday my daughter came by urgent to shop in my kitchen for food because she hadn’t eaten in 5 days.
But here is the rub: I also rejoice when my children laugh at a joke, have friendships, connect with me over a bowl of ramen, and find small, satisfying things that give their lives meaning.  Isn’t that another definition of success? Both of my children are relatively happy despite their often precarious circumstances.  Is that good enough?  For me, it has to be.  What I hope and what they each have are like pages from several different books.  They don’t go together, so why try so hard to put them into the story I want to read?  We will all be disappointed by that futile effort.
How I manage my own grief is to emotionally release my children from living the life I want for them.  I accept them as they are, not as I want them to be. I love them unconditionally.  What they do with their lives is up to them. It is their trajectory.  Not a particularly novel idea, but it still seems new sometimes.
If you are a therapeutic parent who has dealt with your own attachment issues and trauma; if you have sought Theraplay and a zillion other therapies; if you have given yourself the gift of rest and friendship to nurture yourself along the way; if you use regulation skills and taught them to your children; if you did your best to heal your child’s wounded heart and intervened to support mental health; if you did all that, maybe success is in the definition. Perhaps healing is, too.  Acceptance of what is is the only thing that works in the end.
Love Matter,
Ce
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.com and she will register you.
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every second Wednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
Expected Release Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.
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Groundhog Day

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
I wish that movie with Bill Murray called Groundhog Day were not so old, because every day I am living in a version of that movie and I know you are, too. The reference, unfortunately, is becoming a lost one. If you haven’t seen it, do.  If you have, you know what I mean.
Repetition, repetition, repetition creates new neuropathways in your child (and in you.)  If you want your child to change, be patient, be Bill Murray, learn to love Groundhog Day.
Happy Groundhog Day to you and yours,
Love Matters,
Ce
The Attach Place Center
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12noon to 4pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.comand she will register you.
 
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every second Wednesdayof the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.
Follow: Follow Me On Facebook Follow Me On Twitter
3406 American River Drive, Suite D
Sacramento CA 95864
USA

High Road Parenting

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parent,
It is so tempting to think our children with wounded hearts are doing what they do on purpose.  Somehow if it were on purpose, then it follows we would have hope that it could change by will power, incentive, desire or fear.
Unfortunately, hope springs more from seeing with clear eyes the child who stands before us imperfect in need of acceptance, than in the angry presumption that it is stubbornness, opposition, and hatefulness in need of punishment.
Providing safety, training, understanding, empathy, gentle correction and repetition beyond belief slowly allows the development of the part of the brain where the “brakes” live undeveloped.  Imagine being a train without brakes; a car stuck on go, or a bike speeding downhill without a chain.  Our children are like that, just itching to grow up into a stable brain.
Parents, take the high road every chance you get.  From that elevated place, the perspective is deep and wide.  From the low road, there are only embankments, ditches, hairpin turns and sinkholes ahead. It is a choice we all struggle to make.
Love matters,
Ce
The Attach Place Center

The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th

from 12 noon to 4 pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.comand she will register you.

Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is open to all every secondWednesday of the month from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm.  Group and childcare are FREE.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.
Follow: Follow Me On Facebook Follow Me On Twitter
3406 American River Drive, Suite D
Sacramento CA 95864
USA

Take the Parent Challenge

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Wisdom For Adoptive Parents
Dear Parents,
Parents need to be the change agents in their homes.  Most of us want our children to change, when in fact we must be the first to take the challenge.
Relationship over compliance is a good mantra.  When you feel like giving a punishment for bad behavior, stop yourself and ask: Will this punishment help my child manage poor executive function?  Okay, you probably won’t remember that sentence, but you get my drift, right?
Children from difficult beginnings have bad behavior due to delayed prefrontal cortical brain development due to fear neurochemicals in the early years.  A spanking will not make that part of the brain grow.   Safety, understanding, empathy, and repetition will.
If you want to change your child’s behavior, change yours first.  Stop punishing your child for having a traumatized brain.  Challenge on.
Love matters,
Ce
The next 8 hr. Trust Based Parent Training is scheduled for February 20th and 27th from 12 noon to 4 pm.  $200 per couple.  Childcare available for $30 each day. To sign up email Jen@attachplace.com and she will register you.
Monthly Adoptive Parent Support Group is every second Wednesday of the month from 5:30pm to 7:30pm.  Group and Childcare are Free.
Look for Ce Eshelman’s Upcoming Book
 
Drowning With My Hair On Fire
Insanity Relief For Adoptive Parents
 
Expected Publication Date: February 15, 2016
Drowning with My Hair On Fire is a compilation of over 175 daily support letters to parents of adoptive children and other children from difficult beginnings.  With a forward by Dave Ziegler, Ph.D. and a brief personal memoir, this publication is a response to blog-reader requests for a book of letters that can be easily returned to day after day, when inspiration is hard to find.
Praise for Drowning with My Hair On Fire
This woman saved our family. This book will save your sanity! After years (and many therapists) of getting it wrong, Ce Eshelman got our traumatized family on the right path to attachment, sanity, and big big love. Ce’s unique therapy is grounded in the latest brain research, her own struggles raising traumatized children, and work with hundreds of families like ours. Her stories, contained in this book, are our stories: full of pain, confusion, hope, faith, love and practical magic that really works.
Elaine Smith, Adoptive Mother
Ce’s daily blog has been a lifesaver, particularly when days are most dreary and hopeless.  Not only have her words of empathy proven to be priceless to our family, but I have often forwarded them on to others.  Such a comfort to feel understood, with no judgment.
Patty O’Hair, Adoptive Mother
In a real sense “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” is a daily mediation of struggle, success, failure and getting up and trying again.  If that sounds like too much to subject yourself to then don’t adopt a challenging child.  And one more thing, shouldn’t we require prospective adoptive parents to read “Drowning with My Hair on Fire: Insanity Relief for Adoptive Parents” rather than another ‘All they need is love’ manual?
Dave Ziegler, Ph.D., founder of Jasper Mountain Center and author of many books on raising children from difficult beginnings.
3406 American River Drive, Suite D
Sacramento CA 95864
USA